Days of Heaven (1978)

After killing a man in a Chicago steel mill, Bill flees with
girlfriend Abby and kid sister Linda to the wheat fields of the Great
Plains. He and Abby will pretend to be brother and sister, a trick
pulled more than once in Genesis (and we even have a plague of
locusts later).

A rich farmer doesn't have long to live; why shouldn't Abby marry him
so they can get his money after he dies? What could go wrong with that
plan?

Malick's second film, this is a cinematography showpiece with gorgeous
images throughout. Maybe too beautiful for the story, leading us to
suspect we are about to see an epic tale. It's a simpler plot only 94
minutes long.

Many scenes set during "magic hour" just around sunrise and sunset. It
has a look both beautiful and real, reminiscent of Heaven's Gate
(1980).

Malick is also fascinated by wild things: the poor creatures
of the fields, fish in the streams, plants sprouting underground.

Haskell Wexler claimed to have shot over half of the film but is
credited only as "additional photographer". In an extra he doesn't
seen bitter.

Filmed in Alberta. They started farther south but delays forced them
to follow the harvest north.

Available on Criterion Blu-ray with a commentary track by crew
members. They all portray Malick (everyone calls him "Terry") as an
eccentric genius who knew film stock better than the cinematographers,
better than Kodak.

They also say:

Although a difficult location shoot, they remember the project fondly.

Editing took years. They didn't get much static from the studio
because all eyes were on Friedkin's Sorcerer (1977), a much more
expensive project.

It's not true that the entire film was shot during "magic hour". You
can use overcast days, too. And some day-for-night.

The cinematographers did not believe Malick could get away with
these low-light techniques, but he was right.

Malick wanted John Travolta for the Richard Gere part. Geneviève
Bujold was considered for the Brooke Adams role, and Tommy Lee Jones
instead of Sam Shepard.

Linda Manz -- who also narrates -- was something of a street kid,
although her mother was also present on location.

The thick locust swarm was a practical effect: masses of maple tree
seeds (or blackened peanut shells?) dropped from a helicopter, then
played in reverse.

Several good extras, including one by Richard Gere. He is thoughtful
and well-spoken (more so than playwright Sam Shepard!)